Atlanta Falcons OG Andy Levitre restructured his deal and is due $23.25 million through 2018 instead of $27.3 million. He has no guaranteed money past 2015. His 2015 salary was reduced from $6.5 million to $1.5 million with a $5.5 million signing bonus.

Tennessee Titans OG Andy Levitre may be the odd man out of the team's offensive line. Levitre has been working with the second-team offense in practice. While OT Byron Bell has gotten considerable work at left guard, with OT Jamon Meredith slotting in at right tackle.

Tennessee Titans OG Andy Levitre likely will be asked to restructure his contract this offseason, because he is scheduled to count $8.6 million against the salary cap. The team could also designate him as a post June 1 cut and save $6.5 million in salary cap space.

Fantasy Tip: He should be back by the time the season starts, though it may take him some time to get back into rhythm. The Titans' run game could take a bit to get going with their new clientele anyway.

Tennessee Titans OG Andy Levitre (hip) and C Brian Schwenke (ankle) were able to do some individual work during the first day of minicamp Tuesday, April 29, according to head coach Ken Whisenhunt. Both players are "making progress," and should be ready for organized team activities (OTAs) in May.

Tennessee Titans OG Andy Levitre (knee) said he is not fully recovered from the knee injury that limited him during offseason workouts but is getting closer to 100 percent. He was able to participate in team drills during practice Friday, July 26.

Fantasy Tip: Levitre and Warmack are key to the Titans improving their run game, which is a chief goal this year. This'll be a vital development to watch as we determine where to draft Chris Johnson, Kenny Britt and the other skills players

The Tennessee Titans plan to be cautious with OG Andy Levitre (knee), who had arthroscopic knee surgery toward the end of the 2012 season. He is expected to be limited during organized team activities (OTAs).

Impending free-agent OG Andy Levitre (Bills) said Friday, March 1, that the Buffalo Bills have yet to indicate to him whether they want him back. "I'm in limbo right now," Levitre said. "I don't know what their plan is. Now that (S Jairus Byrd) got his franchise tag, there's a week and a half for them to work a deal out with me. But I haven't been offered anything yet. We're waiting around to see if something will pop."

The Buffalo Bills need to work to create more room under the NFL salary cap before the free-agent spending season opens March 12. The team needs about $5.5 million in cap space for their 2013 draft choices, and they need $6.8 million to retain the rights to S Jairus Byrd. A tender offer for restricted free-agent WR David Nelson is $1.3 million, which might make it difficult to bring back impending free-agent OG Andy Levitre.